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SCPLOT BIN
(1966-10-01)
This program will take a list of display instructions and cause it to be plotted. For further or more detailed information consult with Michael Speciner.
A Glossary of Vision Terms
(1967-06-01)
Underlined terms are included in the glossary.
A User's Guide to the A.I. Group LISCOM LISP Complier: Interim Report
(1970-12-01)
The LISCOM version of the AI group PDP/6 LISP compiler is a descendant of the original Greenblatt-Nelson compiler, and is a friendly sibling to the COMPLR version maintained by Jon L. White. The compiler operates in two ...
Discovering Good Regions for Teitelman's Character Recognition Scheme
(1969-05-01)
Warren Teitelman presented a novel scheme for real time character recognition in his master's thesis submitted in June of 1963. A rectangle, in which a character is to be drawn, is divided into two parts, one shaded ...
PROGRAMMER: A Language for Writing Grammars
(1969-11-01)
This memo describes PROGRAMMER, a parser for natural language. It consists of a language for writing grammars in the form of programs, and an interpreter which can use these grammars to parse sentence. PROGRAMMER is ...
Preprocessor for Programs which Recognize Scenes
(1969-08-01)
A visual scene is transformed from a very simple and convenient format, to an internal format which describes the same scene, but is more akin to complex manipulations. This format is compatible with programs like ...
The Integration of a Class of Special Functions with the Risch Algorithm
(1969-09-01)
We indicate how to extend the Risch algorithm to handle a class of special functions defined in terms of integrals. Most of the integration machinery for this class of functions is similar to the machinery in the algorithm ...
On Optimum Recognition Error and Reject Tradeoff
(1969-04-01)
The performance of a pattern recognition system is characterized by its error and reject tradeoff. This paper describes an optimum rejection rule and presents a general relation between the error and reject probabilities ...
The Arithmetic-Statement Pseudo-Ops: .I and .F
(1969-08-01)
This is a feature of MIDAS which facilitates the rapid writing and debugging of programs involving much numerical calculation. The statements used are ALGOL-like and easy to interpret.
Display Functions in LISP
(1970-03-01)
This note describes a system which compiles various forms of LISP lists and arrays into display commands for the DEC 340 display, and provides supporting functions for scaling, for moving elements in a display, for pot ...